ChiefOperator said:
Try listening to AM on a modulation monitor. You'll be amazed how outstanding wideband AM sounds. Very close to FM, even better in some cases.
The problem with AM quality is not the AM signal, rather it's the horrendous tuners available...
I heartily agree...some of my receivers are of "vintage" quality, re: 70's and older. My huge old Sony portable (before the term "boombox' was coined) sounds better than most portables out there, AM and FM; I have an old Marantz AM/FM receiver that I enjoy quite a bit, as well. My old 50's Hammarlund HQ-100A is nice on AM, with its matching Hammarlund speaker (a big brute!). As for listening to AM on my Realistic DX-440, eh...definitely ho-hum. I can't wait to get my Hallicrafters SX-100 repaired to try it out!
I wish AM stereo had've worked out; there's a station here who had been broadcasting in AM stereo, but most likely isn't any more. I never got to hear them in AM stereo, since the receivers were too costly at the time for my budget.
I also have some airchecks of a station I listened to as a kid (KAAY) that have been moved into digital format; even with the DX fading and some atmospheric noise, it is still an enjoyable trip down memory lane to listen to its high-quality signal. Felix McDonald, Eddie Graham and Dave Montgomery all did a wonderful job of making that 50,000-watt blowtorch keep a beautiful audio output.
As a Ham radio operator, I enjoy still using the mode; there is a resurgence of operators using AM and even some folks with the means who are rescuing 1-kw and 5-kw transmitters otherwise destined for the trash heap, and are rebuilding, resurrecting and retuning them for 160 meters (1.8 to 2.0 Mhz) and 75-80 meters (3.5-4.0 Mhz). With a good audio chain ahead of them, they sound BETTER than when they were on the air in commercial usage.
But, there again, it IS the receiver with the proper filtering and bandwidth that makes the difference. You can't squeeze a 10 kc signal through a 4 kc filter and make it sound good at all. I know those figures aren't right, but you get the picture; the signals and filter widths vary from broadcaster to broadcaster (splattery signals), receiver to receiver (some are 6 kc's in width), so results will vary.
Go for some vintage equipment, tune in The Avenue at night and see what results come about; some may, or may not, be surprised....
Bud, KC4HGH